Food For Thought

By | August 2, 2013
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Food for Thought

Yesterday I took a walk. My friend David walked around his domicile in Georgia and me through the Ohio countryside. Although we’re old, we are technologically hip. We talked on our cell phones for a little while as we walked. I walked eight miles, David walked five. Or so he says.

If you’re younger than 50 this will be unbearably boring; it won’t have a bit meaning to you. So go away. If you’re a man over 50 you’ll get it. You might not like it, but you’ll get it.

Face it, if you’re over 50, you are spending your time on the Web looking at scantily-clad women, reading about colon, bladder, and prostate issues, trying to control your soaring cholesterol, clear your clogged arteries – and maybe even considering eating a more healthy diet and starting an exercise regimen. In that case, you might want to keep on reading. I might save you from the agony of celery sticks and riding around for miles on a bicycle with a seat designed for a twenty-year-old bottom. It occurred to me that you could be wasting your time. (Well, maybe not the scantily-clad women part.)

Now, now, ladies, don’t get upset. I’m only stating the facts. Don’t be so Victorian. This is the age of endless Viagra, Levitra, and Cialis TV commercials. You know the ones with the fawning middle-aged jezebels pawing their rotund objects of affection. Come on! Keep reading! You might actually enjoy this look into the bizarre minds of old guys fighting in vain to forestall the ravages of time. You might even take away a tiny morsel (no pun intended) of knowledge and insight into the hardening brains of pathetic old guys like me. If you are offended by scantily-clad women don’t worry. There are absolutely none of those here. This is just boring old geezer stuff. Geezers like me are harmless. We spend most of our time safely ensconced in recliners, snoring away our final years.

Now guys, if you’re here to learn about colon, prostate or other health problems which target guys over 50, there’s a really good chance you’re wasting your time. Should you eat, drink, and be merry or eat right, exercise and walk around sore and starving for the rest of your life? You want the truth? If you eat healthy, exercise and do all the good things rich doctors tell you to do – all you’re doing is prolonging the inevitable. It is pathetic, but it is true. You might think that remaining very healthy until the very day of your death is very desirable. Don’t get your hopes up. Your chances of that are very slim – no matter how many celery sticks you eat, sit-ups you do, or miles your jog. When you’re over 50, there are a plethora of evil things out to get you. I’m sorry to tell you that scantily-clad women are not among them.

A healthy diet and exercise not only just prolongs the inevitable, but might not be in your best interest either. Got your attention? Sometimes, I’m so proud of myself when I think of stuff like this – who wouldn’t be?

It all started when David told me that he attended a business luncheon last Friday. He ate two fried alligator tails but then realized he had to pay for his overindulgence by walking an extra mile or two the next day. We discussed his gluttony critically – even analytically. Yes, we are that type. You know the kind that grates on your nerves. Anyway, we have these kinds of profound discussions quite often. We’re perky, smart, older guys! Truth be told, we have nothing better to do.

He observed that the obese members of his work team ate with reckless abandon. In layman’s terms that means they were cramming down all manner of goodies as fast they could shove them in their greasy, little mouths. That got the wheels turning in our rusty, old heads. We began tossing around the idea that perhaps we (meaning all us older guys) would be better off not exercising; letting ourselves go and eating whatever we wanted – whenever we wanted and as much as we wanted. Then, like David’s morbidly obese co-workers, we could have that Devil-may-care attitude and run amok at lunch and dinner buffets – and keep Dominos delivery drivers busy. Or, maybe we should continue on with our ludicrous daily exercise routines and miserably healthy diets, and prolong the inevitable for as long as we can.

As ironic as it may seem, there’s something to be said for dropping dead suddenly. A stroke or heart attack, brought on by years of over-eating and lack of exercise, might be an express ticket to eternity. If you’re fat and don’t care, good for you. You don’t have a clue when the big one is coming. And, you will have had the pleasure of indulging your gluttonous self and never worried one bit about walking any farther than from the couch to the fridge. Heck, if you’re lucky, you might even drop dead, heading to the refrigerator for another slice of cold pizza and another beer. What a way to go! No lying around while smiling hospice nurses patronize you. No wasting away for months writhing in pain from old age or some awful terminal disease. Nope. Dropping dead on your way to the fridge for more food and drink does have a certain appeal. If you’re a deep-thinker you have to agree – don’t you?

Those of us, like David and I, who monitor our diets carefully and exercise regularly, might well end up ridiculously old, shriveled-up, drooling, mush-eating, curmudgeons; just mindless old, wrinkled prunes, spending our final days in some run-down, dimly-lit, understaffed, bottom-of-the-barrel nursing home, sucking up the resources of our offspring because we’ve managed to outlive our own. And the reason we have been stuffed away in that awful place? Because we spent years on healthy diets and 10-mile walks. We suffer now and we’ll suffer later. Dropping dead on the way to the refrigerator doesn’t sound like too bad of an alternative.

We are still able to walk now, but it’s not a stretch of the imagination to picture ourselves hobbling around behind walkers waiting for death to take us, our well-exercised and starvation-thin bodies ravaged by age.

Is it better to fade slowly and perhaps, agonizingly into death after 80+ years of healthy diet and exercise? Or, is it better to speed up the inevitable and enjoy yourself all the way to the quick-exit ramp off the freeway of life? There’s something to be said about the pleasures of 40+ years of gluttony and napping your life away on the couch. It looks like it’s a toss-up to some, there are plenty of 50+ fat guys, snoozing in recliners, waking up to watch the 3rd quarter of a football game and have another bowl of chips, a couple more slices of pizza and a few more ice-cold beers. They’re all tempting fate: “What me worry?” Then there are some 50+ guys out jogging and coming home to a meal of cold tofu and carrot sticks trying to prolong the inevitable for a few more years. They look miserable and hungry.

 

5 thoughts on “Food For Thought

  1. John in Oz

    Seeing joggers every morning, young, 20 something, maybe 30. Why, I ask myself, they are already slim, lithe and healthy. I was fit and healthy at the same age, ate chocolate, drank beer, ate pizza, didn’t need to run or jog. Got married, played outside with the children, still fit and healthy, ate cream cake, hamburgers, pizza, drank beer. Grew old, probably overweight, don’t run or jog, eat cookies, pizza, cake, biscuits, drink beer. Been for check-up, blood tests, “other” tests, at the health centre, no problems inside or out.
    Driving down the road I see old people shuffling along in track suits, wrinkled skin, heads down, looking miserable, maybe thinking of their carrot and lettuce leaf lunch.
    I have to go now, get some pizza, beer, chocolate chip cookies and candy to suck on whilst watching TV.
    I can’t see the number on my back and when my number is up I will disembark the carousel of life, dreaming of
    pizza, beer ……. ad infinitum.

    Reply
  2. Darlene Anderson

    I am not a geezer, but I love your writing, so I read anyway. My idea is–life is short. You will not get out of it alive. There is no proof that there is a here after, so enjoy yourself (within reason) in this one. Treat yourself well. Treat others the same way. Do something every day that you really enjoy–watch a game, have a cold beer, play with your dog. (You always have to do the work, but if you are going to cash out tonight, at least have one happy memory fresh in your mind.)

    If you are lucky enough to have someone in your life that you love–and who loves you–kiss them every day and tell them that you love them, hold hands whenever you can, touch each other as you go past–and smile a lot.

    Remember that some actions will result in pain–getting drunk and crashing your car, for instance. The outcome should serve to take that action off your list.

    But if it tastes good, looks good or feels good and doesn’t hurt anyone else, go for it. Why the heck not????

    Reply
  3. Jackie Keesee

    Well TC like a lot of people you write so I read because you write well.
    This past week my ex brother in law 80 was finally taken off life support where he has been for 7 months in West Va. His second wife had the control and his kids could do nothing but watch as he suffered. Bill and I have DNR’s. I read the paper this morning and most of the obituaries are for people in their 80’s and 90’s but there is always the exception of course.I exercise daily too 10,000 steps and 20 flights of stairs etc. We eat very healthy 95% of the time but I too am starting to ask myself why. Bill has 2 sisters in the nursing home with dementia I have a 52 year old daughter in law with terminal brain cancer and while I thought that life would get easier to cope with as I aged in some areas it is harder.I sometime worry about the economy global warming the price of medical care.
    I cannot imagine getting through this life without a higher power whom I choose to call God.
    I am 75 and we just celebrated 56 years together.
    Jackie

    Reply
  4. A_Hippy_Hillbillie

    TC, i am curious, are you doing well? Yes, aging (i fired old) from my vocabulary, and in replace, i use aging or seasons in time, which is part of very larger picture, or if you would, “that’s the way it is.”

    Ecclesiastes 3:1-15, A Time for Everything! These inspired words are words for every person, in every place, in every circumstance. God has appointed the times and seasons, the events of our lives, the happy and the sad, the easy and the difficult.

    Reply
  5. Melanie Wood

    Honestly. Aging. Forget about it if you aren’t “in it” yet. I grudgingly (just to shut my boyfriend up) started to learn tennis at the tender age of fifty. Surprise! within 4 years was at US National Championships. The problem is, my Rambo style brought to the surface serious unknown spinal issues I was born with that went untreated until they took me down. But I still practise my serves and once in a while at the courts I play old-timer tennis: opponent plays youthful singles; my side gets a spritely youth who does the running for me & sets me up to clobber our young and good natured opponent. Afterward I will pop the max. of Ibuprofin and drink heavily (water). I walk because I know I must (I have a Border Collie,and on good days she and I dance to Jim Croche!)I enjoy flirting with babies dangling in their backpack on daddy’s back: a secret fleeting relationship that their parents never know about. Perhaps more importantly I watch America’s Funniest Videos to get me in the mood to rush into my day. Laughter, (like love)in the morning readies me for a day that may or may not be difficult. Find the stuff you love and it really helps take away the pain.
    Hmmmm. I think I shall go blog about this. :o)

    Reply

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